April 24, 2024
epa06502937 A general view on the Alexander the Great Airport (Aleksandar Veliki Airport) near the capital of Skopje, The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, 07 February 2018. Macedonian Government made a decision to rename the Alexander the Great Airport to 'Skopje International airport' and Highway Alexander of Macedonia Highway leading to the Greek border to 'Friendship Highway'. Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) and Greece are seeking a solution in a dispute over Macedonia's name. Greece insists that FYROM's name implies territorial claims to its own northern province, called Macedonia. EPA-EFE/GEORGI LICOVSKI

Macedonia to Scrap Alexander Signs To Appease Greece

Macedonia said it will start replacing ‘Alexander the Great’ name signs from the busiest airport and highway – once its decision to rename them to satisfy Greece becomes official.

Macedonia will soon start replacing the old “Alexander the Great” name signs from Skopje airport and from the E-75 highway that leads toward Greece.

The government’s decision to rename key infrastructure was published on Thursday in the official gazette.

New signs erected along the highway will instead bear the new name, “Friendship”. The airport will be simply renamed “Skopje International Airport”.

Prime Minister Zoran Zaev announced that Macedonia would rename the airport and the highway as part of concessions reached with his Greek counterpart, Alexis Tsipras, at their first meeting at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on January 24.

The move was designed to ease relations with Greece, in the hope that this would increase the chances of successfully concluding UN-sponsored bilateral talks on Macedonia’a name. This would then unlock Macedonia’s stalled EU and NATO accession process.

The long-standing “name” dispute centres on Greece’s insistence that use of the word Macedonia implies a territorial claim to the northern Greek province of the same name. Athens insists that a new name must be found that makes a clear distinction between the Greek province and the country.

As a result of the unresolved dispute, in 2008, Greece blocked Macedonia’s NATO entry and it has also blocked the start of Macedonia’s EU accession talks, despite several positive annual reports from the European Commission on the country’s progress.

Greece also saw the old names of the airport and highway as a deliberate provocation, insisting that the ancient warrior king Alexander the Great was an exclusive part of its own, Hellenic heritage.

Athens has praised its neighbour’s move to rename infrastructure as a step in the right direction towards building mutual trust.

Meanwhile, the UN-sponsored talks between the two sides are expected to resume soon.

At the last meeting, on Tuesday, in Vienna, Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias and his Macedonian counterpart, Nikola Dimitrov, discussed details about a possible name agreement for a marathon seven hours.

 

For more read the full of article at The Balkaninsight

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